Mahut wins, in a mere 83 minutes

NEWPORT, R.I. 
Nicolas Mahut walked onto the shadowless center court at the International Tennis Hall of Fame, where temperatures were into the 90s and still climbing, and thought, as he frequently does, about Wimbledon.

"Nothing is worse than what I did in Wimbledon. Every match, I pray it will be easier," he told reporters. "I can't complain any more."

Mahut shrugged off temperatures reaching the mid-90s to beat Alejandro Falla 6-3, 1-6, 6-3 in the first round of the Hall of Fame Championships on Tuesday - Mahut's first singles match since his loss to John Isner at Wimbledon launched them both to instant celebrity and landed the Frenchman's gear next door in the Hall of Fame.

Their 11-hour, 5-minute match was twice suspended because of darkness before Isner won 6-4, 3-6, 6-7 (7), 7-6 (3), 70-68; the 138-game fifth set would itself have been the longest match in tennis history. But there was no danger of another marathon in Newport: The tournament plays three sets, with a tiebreaker.

Once again battling the sun - this time it was blazing, not setting - Mahut needed a more traditional 1 hour, 23 minutes to get past Falla, a Colombian who came within three points of eliminating Roger Federer from Wimbledon in the first round. Also advancing were top-seeded Sam Querrey, defending champion Rajeev Ram and fellow Americans Mardy Fish and Denis Kudla.

"I was kind of struggling out there," said Querrey, who beat Jesse Levine 6-3, 6-3. "Luckily it was only 59 minutes. (I) tried to go for second-serve aces, just get out of there."

Hall of Fame CEO Mark Stenning said the tournament warned staff and fans to be prepared for the heat. Extra stations providing free water were available, and the air conditioned Hall of Fame museum and gift shop were available for fans to take refuge.

"We went through prodigious amounts of water, which was one of our mantras to the staff," Stenning said. "A lot of people came in and said, 'Where can I get some cold water? Where can I get some air conditioning?' There was usually a place where people could get out of the sun."

Australian Carsten Ball withdrew from his match against Argentina's Brian Dabul because of the heat, tournament officials said. He was trailing 1-0 in the third set.

The rest did their best to stay cool.

Mahut regularly asked for a towel to wipe away the sweat, and the request became more frequent as the match went on and the points became more important; in the final game, he wiped off his brow and racket handle virtually every point. At breaks, both players slapped icepacks on their necks and shoulders while ballboys held umbrellas to shield them from the sun.

"I had no choice. Either you play or you stay in the locker room," Mahut said. "From what I did in Wimbledon, I couldn't come out there and say, 'I can't do it. It's too hot.' Now everything's different."

Mahut broke Falla's serve in the sixth game to take the first set, then gave back the second set by losing his first service. Still, the Frenchman must have been encouraged when the chair umpire announced, just 51 minutes in, "Final set."